[quote="dus10"]I'm familiar with using ndiswrapper, but how do I "modprobe usbnet and then run the setup network card utility"?

If you could post the code to type into the terminal that would be grand.[/quote]

Hi dus10

this is an easy one. there really is no code as such. open a terminal and make yourself root by entering the "su" command and then just do

modprobe usbnet

then you can do an lsmod which should give you a list of installed modules amongst which will be usbweb.

then on the menu get yourself to setup / network setup /netcardconfig

this brings up a box that says
Use DHCP Broadcast?
and gives you the option of hitting "Yes" or "No". Say yes and If all has worked so far it'll say someting like "sending broadcast on eth0" and then close itself. Saying "No" will take you through a dialog for setting up a static IP address.

That's it! Open a browser and you should be interneted up.

I've not tried doing the things suggested in answer to my original question, but adding "modprobe usbnet" to the boot config file should take care of the first part of the process and I guess/hope that setting up a static address will take care of part 2.

How do you set this up with ndiswrapper? The device I have is a Sitecom LN-029 10/100 ethernet/usb network adaptor. Might be useful to know sometime!

To be honest I have only used ndiswrapper in ubuntu and it was with a wireless thumbstick. I just yesterday switched my old laptop over to dsl and have'nt even tried the entrega usb/ethernet hub as of yet. I was going to switch over to dsl-n tonight hoping for a more feature rich distro which might have a better chance of identifying my hub. I had an impossible time getting it to work with windows, so just maybe I'll get it working...

Thanks simon and Robert for the info, and if I find any interesting information out tonight I'll repost my findings.

I've not heard of your device, but I have to say I was pretty gobsmacked to find that various distros recognised it and installed the drivers.dsl-n needs just a bit of prompting, but the stuffis there.

On windows it neded the drivers that came withit on disc.

I understand, I think, that these devices run on common standards. If that's true then yours stands an OK chance of working. Distros that mine worked with "out of the box" where mepis lite, ubuntu (X & K) and zenwalk. (all of them a bit "big" for the PC I'm messing around with).

I don't want to be disloyal to dsl-n, but have you tried the latest zenwalk? The dsl/n team do say that dsl is primarily a portable tool and not really a distro for perminant installation. zenwalk is very fast on old machines and has a nice look and feel.

I've rescued a 7 year old HP omnibook laptop with it and am very pleased with the results.

Sorry dsl-n, I'm not dissing you, you're perfect for the PC I'm trying to make useful and also for internet cafes in India that have boxes that think puppy linux is too heavy to load, you saved me from lots of mucking around in W98 over Christmas.

When you're in a net cafe where the lan is manufactured out of string and cocoa tins, where W98 runs like a dog with no legs you thank the gods (Ganeesh I reckon should probably be the patron of DSL/-n) for that CD or inconspicuous USB widget.

Thanks for the help again. A friend had an old PCMCIA ether adapter that he handed over since he was unable to find the windows driver for it (he's strictly a windows guy). The adapter worked perfectly with no work at all. I was considering buying one anyway, but I thought I'd try that little hub one last time since it didn't even work on my windows machine as far as the ether port goes.

As far as distro's go, I noticed Zen uses the xfce gui which I like, so I may check that out for a fuller linux experience.

One last thing... I love linux and my laptop would still be useless without dsl.